7 CPSC Recalls from July 9, 2026: What You Need to Know
The Consumer Product Safety Commission had a busy Thursday. On July 9, 2026, the agency pushed out seven separate recalls in a single day, and the list reads like a strange scavenger hunt through the average American garage, kitchen, and nursery. A grill that can shatter glass over your dinner. A gun safe a toddler could theoretically crack. A power bank that occasionally decides to become a small fire. If you bought anything resembling outdoor cooking gear, yard tools, baby equipment, or a phone charger in the last two years, it’s worth five minutes of your time to check this list.
Here’s every CPSC recall from July 9, 2026, what’s actually wrong with each product, and exactly what to do if you own one.
Cuisinart Propel+ Gas Grill: Glass That Shouldn’t Shatter

Conair recalled about 12,660 units of the Cuisinart Propel+ Four Burner 3-in-1 Gas Grill (model CGG-6331), the one with a built-in pizza oven topped by a tempered glass window. That glass can shatter during use, and the company has already logged 37 reports of it happening, plus one fire. No injuries reported yet, but shattered tempered glass sends shards flying, and that’s a laceration risk nobody wants next to an open flame.
The grill was sold at Lowe’s, Walmart, and Cuisinart.com between December 2024 and May 2026 for $500 to $750. Owners should stop using it, visit Conair’s recall site, remove the glass following the posted instructions, and upload photos of the glass and the serial number. Verified owners get a $500 refund by check.
BBRKIN and MouTec Biometric Gun Safes: A Lock That Isn’t Locking

This one is the scariest on the list. About 9,100 BBRKIN and MouTec biometric gun safes, model QHXP029B, have a fingerprint lock that unauthorized users can open. For a safe whose entire job is keeping firearms away from people who shouldn’t have them, that’s about as serious as a safety defect gets. No incidents reported so far, but the risk is death, full stop.
These were sold exclusively on Amazon from March 2020 through February 2024 for $260 to $409. The fix: stop using the biometric feature immediately, pull the batteries, and use the physical key only until BBRKIN ships a free repair kit.
Kobalt 24V/48V Yard Tools: USB-C Charging Gone Wrong

Greenworks Tools recalled roughly 554,780 Kobalt-branded mowers, trimmers, blowers, chainsaws and pruning saws that use USB-C-equipped lithium-ion batteries. Charging the battery through that USB-C port while it’s still seated in the tool can cause a short circuit and fire. The company has fielded 34 reports of batteries smoking, sparking, or catching fire, though no injuries or property damage have occurred so far.
Sold at Lowe’s and Lowes.com from January through May 2026 for $20 to $482, this recall spans an unusually long list of models. Owners should stop USB-C charging while the battery is in the tool and register at Greenworks’ recall page for a free replacement battery, charger adapter, and warning label.
WonderStone Infant Walkers: A Standard They Never Met

Only about 70 units, but infant products don’t get a pass for small numbers. WonderStone infant walkers, sold on Walmart.com in April 2026, fail to meet the federal mandatory standard because they can fit through a standard doorway and don’t stop at the edge of a step. That’s the exact scenario the standard exists to prevent, since walkers rolling down stairs is a well-documented cause of serious infant injury.
Wonder Stone Toys is offering a full refund. Owners need to disassemble the walker, cut the fabric seat, mark the tray “Recalled,” and email photos to the company.
Insignia Gas Ranges: Knobs With Minds of Their Own

Best Buy recalled about 3,820 Insignia gas ranges (models NS-RGFGSS1 and NS-RGFCGS2) because their front-mounted knobs can get bumped on accidentally by a kid, a pet, or a stray grocery bag, and turn the gas on without anyone noticing. One incident has already been reported. Sold at Best Buy stores and online from November 2020 through March 2026 for $280 to $1,470.
The remedy is refreshingly simple: free knob covers, shipped after you confirm your range is affected through Best Buy’s recall site.
Moodooy Adult Portable Bed Rails: An Entrapment Risk

About 228 Moodooy-branded bed rails, sold on Amazon in February 2026, violate the federal safety standard for adult portable bed rails. Users can get trapped inside the rail or wedged between the rail and the mattress, a serious asphyxiation risk for anyone using a bed rail for mobility support. The rails also lack required warning labels.
Owners should stop use immediately, cut the safety strap, mark the rails “RECALLED,” and email proof to Yuezhang for a full refund.
Flaunt MagSafe Battery Chargers: Overheating Power Banks

Rounding out the list, about 1,400 Flaunt MagSafe battery chargers (model E33A) have a lithium-ion battery that can overheat and ignite. Five incidents have been reported, including burns to a consumer’s hand and arm and four cases of property damage. These sold on flauntcases.com from May 2024 through April 2025 for around $65.
Consumers get a full refund, $65 by check or $80 in store credit, after marking the unit and photographing it per the company’s instructions. Because it’s a lithium-ion battery, do not toss it in curbside recycling. It needs to go to a household hazardous waste facility.
What This Batch of Recalls Says About Right Now
Look at the pattern across these seven: lithium-ion batteries show up in two of them, and small third-party or Amazon-exclusive brands account for four. That’s not a coincidence. Battery-powered everything is booming, and a chunk of that growth is happening through marketplaces with looser vetting than big-box retail. It doesn’t mean skip the online deals. It means check your model numbers against CPSC.gov before you assume last year’s purchase is fine.
FAQ
How do I know if my product is part of one of these CPSC recalls? Check the model number listed on your product against the numbers in each recall notice, then compare where and when you bought it. Every recall above includes the exact sale window and retailer.
Where can I check for a recall CPSC hasn’t sent me an alert about? Search CPSC.gov’s recall database directly or sign up for CPSC email alerts, which flag new recalls the day they’re issued.
Are these recalls mandatory or voluntary? All seven are voluntary recalls conducted in cooperation with the CPSC, which is standard. Manufacturers agree to the recall terms rather than being legally forced through a commission order.
What should I do with a recalled lithium-ion battery product? Never put it in curbside recycling or the trash. Take it to a household hazardous waste collection site and call ahead to confirm they accept lithium-ion batteries.
Do I need a receipt to get a refund on a recalled product? It depends on the recall. Some, like the Cuisinart grill, offer reimbursement of the original purchase price with proof of receipt, or a set refund amount without one. Check the specific remedy details for your product.
How often does the CPSC issue recalls? The CPSC issues recalls year-round, often multiple times per week, covering everything from furniture to electronics to children’s products. Signing up for alerts is the easiest way to stay current.
